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Sorry, Charlie!

So it seems that… 126 years after Charles Darwin’s death, the Church of England is considering apologizing to him. Considering. It is not yet an official Church position, so perhaps we shouldn’t get our hopes up. But at least one cleric, the Rev. Malcolm Brown, feels strongly enough about it that he has launched a website to promote the idea.

I guess one must call this progress, of a sort–at least it is not the religiously motivated abject denial of science and vilification of Darwin that we see in (some… most?) fundamentalist churches. But frankly, it seems to me that apology and forgiveness are part of the social interactions of living people. Once someone has died, you have missed your opportunity to apologize to them. There are enough wrongs in the world that really could use addressing–even if it is simply though apology and forgiveness–that muddying up the “I’m sorry” business by apologizing to the dead is not really helping much. Perhaps even hurting–if I can insult you, then assuage my guilt by apologizing after you are dead, that’s not a lot of motivation for me to do anything about it while you are still around.

Anyway, just my 2 cents.

When giving an apologyTo one you’ve wronged, it seems to meThat person really ought to beAlive, so they can hear.

The Church of England feels it owesApologies, to put a closeTo punching Charles Darwin’s noseFor oh so many years

“Our first reaction sure was wrongBut now I’m sure we get alongSo let’s just tell the gathered throngWe’re sorry stuff was said”

“And though it’s just a little late,We think, if you will contemplateThat you’ll forgive us—oh, but wait—It seems that you are… dead.”

“So we could beg and wail and pleadAnd ask forgiveness in a screedBut there’s no Darwin there to readWhat’s written on our letter.”

Comments

It seems to be more of the usual problem of asking for forgiveness from the wrong people. If God is the one who’s supposed to forgive you for your sins, it makes no difference whether the person you stole from is able to accept your apology in person. Same deal here–it doesn’t matter to them that Darwin is dead, since he’s not the one whose forgiveness they’re really after.